BracketBusters benefits; NC State misses a big chance

NCAA Basketball Betting Lines

02/20/2012 - Philadelphia, PA (Sportsbook Betting Lines) - Teams are running out of time, and more to the point, chances. And as we well know, tournament resumes are built on impressive performances, and more importantly W's, when those chances arise.

ESPN has accomplished so much -- national television coverage first and foremost, but also its association with the V Foundation and other efforts aligned with the NCAA's core mission -- but one of its greatest ideas came 10 years ago when a powerful sports entity decided to explore a national showcase of the nation's mid-major programs.

It was a novel concept met with some skepticism. This was before the days of George Mason, VCU and Butler. The power programs' iron fists ruled college basketball; they controlled the money (to a larger degree than today), the television exposure and the NCAA championship tournament. Many wondered if an event promoting smaller schools would reap any financial benefit and prove a worthwhile use of television time and advertising spots.

Ten years later, it has proved genius. Mid-major programs have gained greater respect with greater success in March, starting with George Mason's shocking run to the Final Four and followed by Butler's back-to-back Final Fours and VCU's sprint to the national semifinals from the initial First Four. These programs have gained exposure (a nationally televised game on ESPN does wonders for recruiting if nothing else). Yet, the most important benefit is a mid-to-late February chance -- removed from the RPI killers of conference play, rather a handpicked opportunity to state tournament worth against a like-minded foe.

Which brings us to the 2012 BracketBusters, a three-day event that gave the likes of Wichita State, Creighton, VCU, Drexel, Saint Mary's and Murray State chances to improve their NCAA Tournament resumes. Assessing the bubble- worthy's March hopes is an exercise for Friday (From the End of the Bench runs both Monday and Friday through the first Monday night in April), but below is a quick synopsis of the teams that did themselves favors and those that didn't during this made-for-TV event.

Winners

Murray State: To hoops loyalists, Isaiah Canaan is already a household name, but for those casual viewers just tuning in, what a methodically efficient show they witnessed Saturday night. Canaan scored 23 points on just 13 shots, playing through the offense instead of clogging it with isolation attempts. He and the Racers played perhaps their most complete game of the season with the world watching and Dickie V in the house. Three main thoughts from Saturday's 65-51 demolition of a very good Saint Mary's team: Murray State has someone the VCUs or George Masons didn't have -- a first-team All-American candidate. Yes, Canaan is that good. The Racers have three RPI Top 25 victories, which to me weigh more heavily than a gaudy one-loss record in the Ohio Valley Conference, the 21st-rated conference by the RPI. Finally, Ivan Aska may be Murray State's most important player down the stretch because he provides a perimeter-oriented team with some toughness and interior scoring. The Racers are a more dangerous, well-rounded outfit with Aska on the floor, and his eight-point, four-rebound line from Saturday doesn't do justice to the difference he made.

Drexel: I discussed the Dragons' at-large profile on Twitter yesterday before their rout of short-handed Cleveland State and will again in the Friday column, but for now, who can't be impressed with Bruiser Flint's outfit over the last two months? The Dragons haven't lost since January 2 (a bad loss at that, though, 58-44, to Georgia State), rolling off 15 straight wins in relative obscurity until the 69-49 victory over the Vikings on Saturday. Freshman Damion Lee scored 18 points to pace the Dragons, who are tied with George Mason atop the Colonial Athletic Association standings (the Dragons won the only meeting, 60-53).

Creighton and Long Beach State: Both members of Saturday's instant classic make this list for their effort and for passing the tournament benchmark dubbed as the "eye test." The 49ers took it to the Bluejays for a good portion of the game, but give Creighton credit, it took a punch and used its offensive firepower to fight back into the game. Antoine Young's left-handed floater just before the buzzer proved to be the game-winner, but this slugfest didn't produce a loser. Creighton's Doug McDermott, stuck in a funk of sorts that aligned with the Bluejays' recent tailspin, exploded for 36 points and 11 rebounds, almost single-handedly destroying the 49ers with jump shots, dribble-drives and one acrobatic, over-the-head tip-in that is sure to be on Top 10 lists for some time. Yet, Long Beach State did little to hurt its at- large chances with its road performance. Yes, a win would have been a nice buffer, but the 49ers are blitzing through the Big West in a such a dominant fashion that an auto bid seems like a mere formality. But if it isn't? Well, there is always this battle in Omaha, but also a large inspection of a non- league schedule that was the toughest in the nation. More on that Friday.

Losers

Saint Mary's: The Gaels are in the NCAA field, but the last two games have lowered the roar around this team to a murmur. Saint Mary's has lived all season off its WCC-best offensive efficiency (1.17 points per possession adjusted), but Matthew Dellavedova's ankle injury has significantly hampered the Gaels' ability to score easy baskets and even work their way into basic sets. The loss to the Racers was a perfect storm, yes, but it also was the third defeat in four contests and points to an alarming trend: Saint Mary's is having trouble scoring, and its defense is not stingy enough to make up for the sudden offensive inefficiency.

Davidson: It was a long shot, but a victory over Wichita State, coupled with the December victory at Kansas and a close loss in the Southern Conference championship game may have made an intriguing case. Instead, the Wildcats never found answers for the Shockers' Joe Ragland, who poured in 30 points during the 91-74 victory. Davidson now must travel the auto bid route.

Elsewhere last week, other programs took advantage of their chances, while others fell short. From the End of the Bench cherry-picks North Carolina State and Kansas State for polar-opposite results.

It was a week of opportunity for the resurgent Wolfpack, who stared at resume- building games at Duke and versus Florida State. The week started splendidly, as North Carolina State looked the tournament-worthy part, jumping out to a 16-point lead in Durham and holding a 20-point edge early in the second half. Then, the attacking mentality crawled into a not-to-lose shell, possessions were wasted through stagnation and turnovers, and foul trouble mounted. Duke took advantage from the charity stripe and with a pressure defense that made the ticking seconds seem longer. The result was a complete collapse and a missed opportunity that ended with a 78-73 loss. The weekend ended with a much weaker effort in a 78-62 loss to Florida State, which was marred by two Wolfpack legends -- Tom Gugliotta and Chris Corchiani -- ejected from the stands for apparently berating the officials.

Kansas State's week began with a narrow 59-53 loss to Kansas, not a harmful defeat but definitely one Frank Martin would have liked to squeeze out as a prized profile enhancer. It got the quality W five days later, a road victory, 57-56, at Baylor. Jordan Henriquez-Roberts' bucket in the closing seconds gave the Wildcats the lead, and they held their collective breath when Quincy Miller's jumper just before the horn drew only iron. "When a team punches us, we have to punch them back," said Henriquez-Roberts. That mindset makes the Wildcats a dangerous club come March; the grind-it-out bunch that could cause undisciplined teams fits. The Wildcats' bubble standing will also be discussed on Friday.

FINE 15

1. Kentucky (26-1): The Wildcats showcased their depth in a 77-62 victory over Ole Miss. Terrence Jones led one of five Wildcats in double figures. Up next: Mississippi State, which is on a three-game skid and moving precariously close to the bubble.

2. Syracuse (27-1): Two tough road wins at Louisville and Rutgers bring the Orange's mettle to the forefront. C.J. Fair scored a career-best 21 points in the 74-64 win over the Scarlet Knights. Fair's offensive outburst again demonstrates Syracuse's offensive depth ahead of a visit from suddenly-surging South Florida, winners of four straight and 10-4 in conference play.

3. Missouri (25-2): The Tigers' seventh straight victory was bolstered by Kim English's 21 points at Texas A&M. Matt Pressey, a valuable bench presence, sprained his left ankle ahead of a big week that starts Tuesday against Kansas State and finishes Saturday in a battle royal at Allen Fieldhouse.

4. Kansas (22-5): After outlasting the Wildcats, Kansas thumped Texas Tech, 83-50, ahead of a trap game at Texas A&M. Thomas Robinson and company can't look ahead to its Saturday date with Missouri.

5. North Carolina (23-4): North Carolina continued its mastery at home against Clemson, winning for the 56th straight time in Chapel Hill against the Tigers. Harrison Barnes scored 24 points and Tyler Zeller added 14 in the victory. North Carolina's road week ahead includes tough tests at desperate North Carolina State and Virginia.

6. Michigan State (22-5): I think "we" as hoops fans undersell Draymond Green's skill set. We wax poetic about his leadership and his intangibles, but the senior forward is having an All-America season. He scored 20 points with 10 rebounds and seven assists in a 76-62 victory at Purdue. The Spartans' week ahead includes a trip to Minnesota (a game the Golden Gophers need) and a home date with Nebraska.

7. Duke (23-4): The big reason for Duke's ferocious rally against the Wolfpack? Not Austin Rivers but Seth Curry, who attacked the rim with a controllable aggression I haven't seen from the guard this season. If he becomes another dribble-drive scorer, it could really open shooting lanes for a player you haven't heard much from lately: Andre Dawkins. Duke has a dangerous Thursday night date with Florida State (the Seminoles already won in Cameron) before hosting Virginia Tech two days later.

8. Georgetown (20-5): There is much talk, and rightfully so, about the Hoyas' Princeton offense, but they defend with just as much precision. The Hoyas held Providence, a team that went for 90 against Louisville earlier this season, to 25 percent shooting in the 63-53 victory. The Hoyas head to Seton Hall early in the week before hosting Villanova on Saturday.

9. Ohio State (22-5): The Buckeyes' main problem? Jared Sullinger has the team's best three-point percentage. David Lighty is long gone, and William Buford and DeShaun Thomas struggle when teams don't double-team Sullinger in the post. Buford is shooting just 36 percent from long range and Thomas only 32.6 percent. Ohio State needs one of the two to shoot more consistently to take some of the pressure and focus off Sullinger. Up next for the Buckeyes is Illinois, which is laboring and checking out by the game with embattled head coach Bruce Weber frustrated and out of answers.

10. Marquette (22-5): The Golden Eagles' 79-64 beatdown of UConn was a simple case of disciplined vs. undisciplined. Marquette plays within and embraces a system, while the Huskies freelance and go into 1-on-1 isolation far too often. Marquette is a two-man offense with Jae Crowder (20) and Darius Johnson-Odom (24), but the Golden Eagles play such suffocating defense, the two-man sets (they took 31 of the team's 54 shots) may not be an issue. Rutgers heads to Milwaukee early in the week before the Golden Eagles take the show on the road to West Virginia.

11. Florida (21-6): Tough to figure out the Gators, who looked lost a week ago then responded in impressive fashion with consecutive road wins at Alabama and Arkansas, the latter a 30-point waxing where they finished two points short of the century mark. With no more talk about the Gators' at-large viability, we can look ahead to a week that includes a home date with Auburn and a road game at Georgia.

12. Baylor (22-5): The Bears will never reach their potential this season if Perry Jones III doesn't start playing like the NBA lottery pick many scouts assume he is. Look, I've chastised Jones' up-and-down play all season, but truth be told, sometimes it takes a freshman a while to adjust. Well, it's been more than enough time, and the four-point, four-rebound outing against Kansas State will not cut it. Baylor travels to Texas and hosts Oklahoma on Saturday.

13. Murray State (26-1): The Racers can book their tickets for the big dance after the thorough smack-down of Saint Mary's, now the only question is seeding. Murray State's seed ceiling will be an interesting case study if the Racers win out and claim the Ohio Valley's automatic bid. The Racers' season ends this week with two tough conference games. They try to avenge their only loss with a game at Tennessee State on Thursday and travel to Tennessee Tech on Saturday.

14. Michigan (20-7): Believe it or not, the Wolverines can win the Big Ten title, and the schedule sets up for them. Winnable road games at Northwestern, Illinois and Penn State surround a home date with Purdue. Four straight W's may give the Wolverines a surprising conference crown.

15. New Mexico (22-4): From out of nowhere, the Lobos have stormed into the Fine 15 and the national spotlight with the most impressive week in some time. A 10-point win at San Diego State was eye opening in itself, but a 20-point walloping of UNLV at The Pit puts the Aggies in position to win an upper-tier conference this season and perhaps vault into protected seed territory (top 4 seeding). There can be no let up with a road week on the way. First, a tough trip to Fort Collins to face bubble-sitter Colorado State followed by a weekend visit to TCU.

Blackjakc NCAA Basketball Betting News


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Super Bowl 2009 Betting

Super Bowl 2009 Betting propositions

Underdog bettors love the Super Bowl and, history suggests, the underdogs love them back. And the big dogs bite harder.

Even so, there is a warning in store for Super Bowl gamblers who must love dogs: The Arizona Cardinals Super Bowl betting lines might not be enough of a Cinderella to make it worth your while.

Although the Cardinals were widely panned as one of the worst division winners and least playoff-worthy teams in recent memory, their trip to Super Bowl XLIII Jan. 31 in Tampa against the Pittsburgh Steelers Super Bowl betting lines comes with a little more respect from the oddsmakers than you might imagine. They are a 7-point underdog at most sports books.

If you count yourself among those who covet the big dog in the big game, this isn’t exactly great news. You should have been hoping for more points. This is because the facts show that the bigger the dog, the better the bet in the Super Bowl.

Case in point: Over the past 13 seasons, double-figure underdogs in the Super Bowl are 4-0-1 ATS and have won the past three outright. In fact, the last double-digit chalk to do the deed for bettors was the 1995 San Francisco 49ers, who managed to beat the astounding 19-point spot afforded backers of the San Diego Chargers in the 49-26 romp in Super Bowl XXIX.

By contrast, 7-point favorites are 2-1-1 ATS in the same span, the last such contest resulting a cover grinded out by the Colts in their 29-17 win over the Bears two seasons ago in Super Bowl XLI.

In 2004, the Patriots failed to cover the number in their 32-29 triumph over the Carolina Panthers in Super Bowl props while the Rams and Titans gave everyone a refund in 2000 after the Rams posted a 23-16 win as a seven-point favorite.

So while Arizona’s run has included impressive upsets as a 10-point road underdog to the Carolina Panthers and Sunday’s 32-25 win in the NFC championship game to the 4-point favored Philadelphia Eagles, their long-shot story lacks a bit of the David vs. Goliath storyline of past Super Bowl underdogs.

While the seven-point spread represents a significant gap in the perception of strength between the two teams, it is far from monumental. For example, last season the Giants were the wild-card afterthought turned road-warrior buzzsaw, with stunning wins over the Buccaneers, Cowboys and Packers to earn their place in the Super Bowl.

There, they played spoiler to New England’s bid to become the first 19-0 team in NFL history and cemented their place in sports betting lore with a 17-14 win as a 12.5-point underdog.

In other words, the Cardinals appear to have their work cut out for them as a mid-range underdog. But in homage to the spread beaters who have come before them, here is a brief look back at recent colossal upsets in the Super Bowl:

SB XLII -- 2008 -- New York Giants 17, New England Patriots 14 (Giants +12.5) – Eli Manning’s 13-yard touchdown pass to Plaxico Burress in the final minute clinched the historic upset for the Giants, who used a masterful defensive plan to slow down Tom Brady and the previously undefeated New England Patriots.

XXXVI -- 2002 -- Patriots 20, Rams 17 (Patriots +14) – This was the coming out party for the aforementioned Brady, who went from obscure sixth-round draft pick to Super Bowl hero in one fell swoop. He led the game-winning drive in the final minute – eschewing analyst John Madden’s advice to take a knee and play for overtime – leading to Adam Vinatieri’s memorable 48-yard field goal that split the uprights as time expired.

XXXII 1998 Broncos 31, Packers 24 (Denver +12) – The first of John Elway’s two consecutive Super Bowl titles to put an end to his Hall of Fame career was an upset for the ages. The Broncos used the determination of Elway and a 157-yard, three-touchdown performance from Terrell Davis to turn back Brett Favre and the heavily favored Packers.

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March Madness odds and printable March Madness brackets

With the field of 64/65 set, MySportsbook.com has the Florida Gators as the 4-1 favorite to successfully defend their National Championship.  Men’s Division-1 College Basketball has not seen a team repeat as National Champions since Duke won back to back championships in ’91 & ‘92.  After losing three out of four late in the season, the Gators are full of momentum as they won their last four games by an average of 18 points.  Not surprisingly, right behind the Gators are the other three top seeds: Kansas 5-1, UNC 6-1, and Ohio State 7-1.  Many consider Kansas to be the hottest team in the country, having won 11 straight. With Kansas, it is hard to ignore all of the early exits from the “dance” in recent years.  With an impressive ACC Tournament, UNC ensured themselves the other top seed.  UNC has about as much talent as any other team in the tournament but with a team that’s best players are primarily freshman and sophomores, could youth be a concern.  Behind freshman sensation, Greg Oden, OSU will look to do what their football team failed to do just a few months earlier.  OSU seems to have peeked at the right time, as they currently have a 17 game winning streak.  Since the tournament field was expanded in 1985, there has never been an instance where all four #1 seeds advanced to the Final Four.  It is obvious that each of the top seeds have the talent to make it through to Atlanta.  But as everyone knows, when makes the NCAA Tournament so special are all of the spoilers and “Cinderella” stories that knock off the favorites on a daily basis.

Be sure to logon to MySportsbook.com to see check out all of the early lines and “March Madness” props.  Also be sure to enter the “$10,000,000 Perfect Bracket Contest”. If someone has the skills to predict every winner, they will be set for life and walk away with $10,000,000.  Even if no one can cash in on the Grand Prize, with a $35,000 guaranteed prize pool and a Mazda RX-8 to the first prize winner, Sportsbook.com’s bracket is a must for all “March Madness” fans.

MySportsbook.com’s odds to win the Championship and Regions:

EAST National Championship Region
Arkansas 300-1 50-1
Belmont 1000-1
Boston College 100-1 40-1
Eastern KY 1000-1
George Washington 75-1
Georgetown 10-1 3-2
Marquette 100-1 40-1
Michigan State 100-1 25-1
New Mexico St. 500-1 200-1
UNC 6-1 6-5
Oral Roberts  500-1
Texas 15-1 5-1
Texas Tech 200-1 5-1
USC 75-1 20-1
Vanderbilt 100-1 30-1
Washington State 40-1 15-1
WEST
Duke 50-1 10-1
Florida A&M 1000-1
Gonzaga 200-1  40-1
Holy Cross 300-1
Illinois 300-1 60-1
Indiana 75-1 40-1
Kansas 5-1 13-10
Kentucky 100-1 40-1
Niagara 1000-1
Pittsburgh 40-1 8-1
Southern Ill. 50-1 12-1
UCLA 10-1 3-2
VCU 500-1 100-1
Villanova 100-1 40-1
VA Tech 50-1 15-1
Weber St 1000-1
Wright St 1000-1 300-1
MIDWEST
Arizona 50-1 30-1
Butler 40-1 30-1
Davidson 300-1
Florida 4-1 4-5
Georgia Tech 75-1 25-1
Jackson State 1000-1
Maryland 30-1 6-1
Miami-OH 300-1
Notre Dame 100-1 20-1
ODU 500-1 100-1
Oregon 40-1 6-1
Purdue 300-1 60-1
Texas A&M CC 1000-1
UNLV 100-1 30-1
Winthrop 500-1 100-1
Wisconsin 15-1 7-2
SOUTH
Albany 200-1
BYU 200-1 40-1
Central CT St. 1000-1
Creighton 100-1 35-1
Long Beach St. 500-1 200-1
Louisville 40-1 10-1
Memphis 30-1 4-1
Nevada 75-1 35-1
North Texas 500-1
Ohio State 7-1 6-5
Penn 500-1
Stanford 200-1 50-1
Tennessee 100-1 20-1
Texas A&M 12-1 11-5
Virginia 75-1 18-1
Xavier 100-1 40-1

Field                                              100-1

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